{UAH} AKIM ODONG AND BETTY KAMYA YOU HAVE MAIL
Akim Odong/Betty Kamya
I was so tired last night, as I was so excited with the winning of my party into Quebec. I simply dosed off and slept without getting the resignation on my table. It seems barely 3 hours after I dosed off Gwokto got the resignation from this fool. She threatened the country and she threatened us with a referendum which we have already passed, she lived in the past and today she is erased. I will not be surprised to find her tomorrow morning on Bay street working with investors now that she studied social work. There is a couple of things to recognize on this woman, she married a man that studied business and he bought a gas station at age 17. She tried so much to win a leadership race of the party and when she won the first time, a man with a gun walked into a hall to take her head off, he shot and killed one of her technician and a bullet bruised another man. This man failed to do damage for his gun luckily jammed.
Betty this is what democratic people do, when EM goes to bed when he knows they have lost an election, EM wakes up with a firkin resignation on the table. They never hold society ransom. Party Quebecor has lost this election to almost getting erased, but it is not dead yet, it is going back to the drawing board and come next election we will be prepared to go after it one more time. This country is important for all of us to live in but not to slice into smaller pieces. When you lose an election and you tag along you become a menace to society, so are you so is Dr Kiiza Besigye so is every one that gets defeated and fails to move on. Betty it is time you draft your resignation letter and hand it to Abbey Ssemuwemba for posting. I need to read it when I come back from work and today.
Do you at minimum love Uganda that far? Just asking Geeez
EM
On the 49th Parallel
Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni and Dr. Kiiza Besigye Uganda is in anarchy"
Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni na Dk. Kiiza Besigye Uganda ni katika machafuko"
From: ugandans-at-heart@googlegroups.com [mailto:ugandans-at-heart@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Gwokto La'Kitgum
Sent: Tuesday, April 08, 2014 1:26 AM
To: ugandans-at-heart
Subject: {UAH} Pauline Marois resigns as PQ leader after crushing election defeat
Pauline Marois resigns as PQ leader after crushing election defeat
By Andy Radia | Canada Politics – 1 hour 53 minutes ago
She gambled, and she lost. And in the face of defeat, Quebec Premier Pauline Marois announced that she will resign as Parti Quebecois leader following an crushing election defeat which saw the Liberals win a majority government.
To add insult to injury, Quebec's first female premier couldn't even retain her seat in the riding of Charlevoix-Cote-de-Beaupre.
"This evening, you'll understand that under the circumstances I will be leaving my post," she told a subdued crowd in Montreal.
The early analysis is that Marois led a horrible campaign full of missteps and unfocused messaging, which included a lot of talk about a referendum that Quebecers many clearly weren't interested in.
In Marois' defence, she can't be blamed for her star-candidate Pierre Karl Peledeau proclaiming that he wanted an independent Quebec (Incidentally, PKP won his seat).
But she can and must be blamed for her outlandish musings about sovereignty.
More on the Quebec provincial election:
· Philippe Couillard’s Liberals to form majority government in Quebec
· Parti Quebecois Leader Pauline Marois loses her own riding in Quebec election
· Parti Quebecois suffers resounding loss in Quebec election
· Federal leaders cheer Parti Quebecois defeat, but can they let their guard down?
· Complete coverage: Quebec election
Early in the campaign, over the course of two days, Marois shared that she wanted her own country independent of Canada. She wanted travellers in both nations to be able to go back and forth without borders and passports. She wanted to use the Canadian dollar, to seek a seat at the Bank of Canada, and to study the issue of offering dual citizenship to Quebecers.
Marois also has to wear her party's Charter strategy, not to mention her silence in response to the discriminatory comments of PQ candidates with regard to Muslims and other religious minorities.
But while the last 30 days have certainly been egregious, its important to note that Marois' focus on sovereignty and identity politics didn't start one month ago at the beginning of the campaign. That has been the focus for much of her 18 months in power.
On election night in 2012, the new premier made no bones about her intentions.
"I would like to talk to our friends and neighbours in Canada," she said during her victory speech.
"As a nation we want to make the decisions about the things that are important for us. We want a country. And we will have it."
Marois wasn't able to achieve her goal of an independent Quebec but in many subtle ways, she masterfully forwarded her sovereignty agenda.
In Septemebr 2012, the Canadian flag wasremoved from the Quebec legislature as members of the PQ were sworn into office.
In December of that year, the government proposed Bill 14, which would have strengthened Quebec's French language laws. One of the caveats included in the legislation was an edict ordering companies with 26 to 50 employees to obtain Certificates of Francization, indicating that all communications within the workplace were in French.
Marois also embarked on a Quebec independence road show, of sorts.
In December 2012 in New York, the premier addressed a crowd of well-heeled business types, telling them that they shouldn't lose sleep over an independent Quebec.
And in January 2013 Marois was in Scotland supporting a Scottish independence movement.
"It will show that this [independence] is not an old idea, but a very modern idea, and Scotland is an example in this perspective," Marois told reporters.
"It will tell Quebeckers that it is still possible to attain the objective."
And then there was the Values Charter, which would have banned public employees from wearing religious symbols in public institutions.
From day one, minority groups and opponents of the legislation accused the government of using the legislation to create a wedge between Francophones and the rest of Canada.
And it almost worked. That's what she did with a minority government — just imagine what she could have done with a majority!
Tonight, many Quebecers and Canadians are surely happy that they will never have to find out.
Au revoir Madame Marois. Au revoir.
___________________________________
Gwokto La'Kitgum
"Even a small dog can piss on a tall Building", Jim Hightower
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